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Unleashing the full capacity of the installed fibre base

Unleashing the full capacity of the installed fibre base
Unleashing the full capacity of the installed fibre base
There are some 20 million kilometres of installed fibre transmission links throughout the world, the great majority of which operate at a wavelength of 1.3µm. These links are limited in capacity by a combination of fibre loss and the bandwidth of their electronic repeaters, both of which limitations can be removed by the use of optical amplifiers. It is therefore highly attractive to consider uprating the world's installed fibre base by the simple installation of optical amplifiers. In the absence at present of a suitable commercially-available 1.3µm amplifier, it has been proposed to change the operating wavelength from 1.3µm to 1.55µm of those fibre links which have been specified for dual-window operation, thus enabling the erbium-doped fibre amplifier (EDFA) to be employed. The penalty of this approach is that the chromatic dispersion of the fibres is high (17ps/nm.km) at 1.55µm and must be compensated if a reasonable transmission capacity is to be achieved. Thus upgrading existing installed 1.3µm links involves either developing a viable 1.3µm amplifier or operating at 1.55µm using EDFAs and dispersion compensation.
Payne, D.N.
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Laming, R.I.
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Richardson, D.J.
ebfe1ff9-d0c2-4e52-b7ae-c1b13bccdef3
Grudinin, A.B.
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Payne, D.N.
4f592b24-707f-456e-b2c6-8a6f750e296d
Laming, R.I.
c86f359b-9145-4148-bc7d-ae4f3d272ca2
Richardson, D.J.
ebfe1ff9-d0c2-4e52-b7ae-c1b13bccdef3
Grudinin, A.B.
8f50b467-7d60-46db-b29d-a89b1059a1d8

Payne, D.N., Laming, R.I., Richardson, D.J. and Grudinin, A.B. (1993) Unleashing the full capacity of the installed fibre base. ECOC: 19th European Conference on Optical Communications, Montreux, Switzerland. 01 Sep 1993.

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Other)

Abstract

There are some 20 million kilometres of installed fibre transmission links throughout the world, the great majority of which operate at a wavelength of 1.3µm. These links are limited in capacity by a combination of fibre loss and the bandwidth of their electronic repeaters, both of which limitations can be removed by the use of optical amplifiers. It is therefore highly attractive to consider uprating the world's installed fibre base by the simple installation of optical amplifiers. In the absence at present of a suitable commercially-available 1.3µm amplifier, it has been proposed to change the operating wavelength from 1.3µm to 1.55µm of those fibre links which have been specified for dual-window operation, thus enabling the erbium-doped fibre amplifier (EDFA) to be employed. The penalty of this approach is that the chromatic dispersion of the fibres is high (17ps/nm.km) at 1.55µm and must be compensated if a reasonable transmission capacity is to be achieved. Thus upgrading existing installed 1.3µm links involves either developing a viable 1.3µm amplifier or operating at 1.55µm using EDFAs and dispersion compensation.

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Published date: 1993
Venue - Dates: ECOC: 19th European Conference on Optical Communications, Montreux, Switzerland, 1993-09-01 - 1993-09-01

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 77223
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/77223
PURE UUID: 1ff26c59-3bb0-45f2-8004-904a64b16540
ORCID for D.J. Richardson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7751-1058

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Date deposited: 11 Mar 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:34

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Contributors

Author: D.N. Payne
Author: R.I. Laming
Author: D.J. Richardson ORCID iD
Author: A.B. Grudinin

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